Agency Procurement Guide
Contracts with the Department of the Army
Army contracting flows through ACC (Aberdeen, Redstone, Warren, Rock Island, APG), MICC (installation services), USACE (construction), and PEO-level program offices. The Army is also the lead service for many joint programs like JLTV.
Procurement overview
- Annual contract obligations
- ~$175B
- Mission
- Land warfare, training, and logistics
- Procurement office
- Army Contracting Command (ACC)
Contract vehicles used most
- ITES-3S/4H
- OASIS+
- RS3
- BOS MATOC
How businesses win bids with the Army
ACC-Aberdeen and ACC-Warren are particularly accessible for small businesses. Tracking SBIR.gov topics from DEVCOM and CCDC routinely yields entry-point Phase I awards.
Most active NAICS codes
- NAICS 541330 — Engineering Services
- NAICS 541512 — Computer Systems Design Services
- NAICS 336992 — Military Armored Vehicle, Tank & Tank Component Manufacturing
Industries that sell most to Army
States with the most Army contracting activity
FAQs
- How much does the Department of the Army spend on contracts annually?
- The Department of the Army obligates approximately $175 billion in contracts each fiscal year.
- What contract vehicles does the Department of the Army use most?
- Common contract vehicles include ITES-3S/4H, OASIS+, RS3, BOS MATOC.
- What NAICS codes are most used by the Department of the Army?
- The most-used NAICS codes are 541330 (Engineering Services); 541512 (Computer Systems Design Services); 336992 (Military Armored Vehicle, Tank & Tank Component Manufacturing).
- How do small businesses win work with the Department of the Army?
- ACC-Aberdeen and ACC-Warren are particularly accessible for small businesses. Tracking SBIR.gov topics from DEVCOM and CCDC routinely yields entry-point Phase I awards.
- Where is the Department of the Army's procurement office?
- Primary procurement oversight sits with the Army Contracting Command (ACC).